v.. 7 ' '., '. VOL XIX. IiOONE, WATAUGA. COUNTY, N C THURSDAY JULY 4, 1907. NO. 0. tfkWWl Atfl$fi TV VROVESSIOSAI. LD.LOWB, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BANNER ELK, Nf C. jWill practice in the court& A Watauga,, Mitchell and adjoining counties. 7 6. '04 Todd & Ballou. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. JEFFERSON, N. 0. . Will practice in. all the couits Special attention given to real entate law and collections. (J-IS-'OG- J. E- HODGES, Veterinary Surgeon, -SANDS, N.O. Aua. C. ly. ,F, A. LINNEY, -ATTORNEY. AT LAW, BOONE, N. C. Will practice in the. courts of the 13th Judicial District in all matters of a civil nature. 6-11-1906. EDMUND JONES, LAWYER .. LKNOlll, N. (I' ll ' Practice Regularly in cbe Courts of Watauga, 6.1 .6. Attorney At Law, . BOONE, N. C. Careful attention tcivon to : !it-fti'n$. E F LOVILL - ATTORNEY AT LAW, -nonsh, A'. C ipH'ial attention given .til business entrusted to t s oare.!34 . , 1-1 '04. A, A. Holsclaw, ATTORNEY AT LAW-- Mountmn Lityjiennessee. Will practice in all the court h e rr r . . . ni l oi itMiiiPssep, mhib u no reoerni. Special attention kivhi to col lisions nnd nil oher matters of a lfjral nature., - Office north east of court house. Oct. 11, 1906, ly. s ' (u. M. XI AD HON, D. b. S. DALJ,S.t. a m . I am now located here tor the practice of Dentisti v, and am ma king Rridge and down work, the most intricate work known to the profession, a specialty. ISSMy work is all done under positive guarantee no satisfaction, no pay. Nothing but the best mate. rial used in the execution of any pi my work. . E.S.G0FFEY -ATlOlMEi Al LA- .. BOONE, N. C Prompt attention given to all matters of, a legal nature. 8" Abstracting titles and collection of claims a special- tr. M'07. R. Ross Donnelly UNDERTAKER & EMiiALMER SII0UNU-- - - lennessee, Has Varnished and Glass White Coffins; Black Broad, -loth and White Plush Caskets; Black and White Metalic C a 8 k t b Robes, Shoes and Finiahinirs. Extra-large ,.CofDiiB and Cim kets always on hand.Thone or- Idrs given special Attention; K. ROSS DONNELLY. Honor Our Women. (J. W. Baily in News & Observer.) To the Editor! I wish to callatJ tention to what seems to me the most obvious 'duty of the "people of North Carolina, namely, the building of a monument to our Women of the Confederacy. , )c, have our monuments to the Soldiers of the Confederacy. We have recognized our debt to them. So indelibly has the charactei of their achievements been impress ed that a thousand years hence they will continue to march at the head of all the great armies of history. Their glory shall never fade. But we have neglected their wives and mothers and sisters and for no other reason than that they were women. For. we do all know that in valor, in de votion, in suffering and in ser vice they were not surpassed by the heroic names on the battle fields of our Lost Cause. It de tracts nothing front but rather adds to the record of the Confed erate soldier to sn,y that he was heartened for his sacrifices, main tained in his achievements and in spired, in his heroic warring by the wife, the mother, the sisteror the sweet-hea.rt who sent h i m forth with his blessing and throughout the deadly days of his battles kept her heart strong while she maintained his home nurtured his children, 'managed his affairs and as often as oppor tunity was given cheered him with her message and comforted him with the work of her hands. They could not have been the brp ve men that that they were; they could not have maintained the war as they did; they could not'have given themselves to the battle with that spirit which won for them their undying glory, had not the Women of the Con federacy, in complete self-efface ment, with heroism unsurpassed in human annals. 'chosen to bear without, a word: save words of cheer, all the horrors of a war which stripped them of their pro tectors and threw them upon their own resources. Imagine what that meant! The- mother who gathered "her brood about her at fall of night with her heart on the battlefield; who arose with the morning to do her own and her husband's work; who t hrough out the day must expect the worst of news; who made no cry or complaint, but sent on her brave letters; who wrought in he roic endeavor to maintain the new nation; who month after month and year afteryearendur ed without any faltering that the soldiers knew of is she not worthy of the noblest of memo rials, If the soldier fought, she wrought; if the soldier gave him self, she gave herself; if the soldier suffered, she Buffered; if the sol dier died, Bhe died a thousand deaths. And if never shall fade the soldier's fame on our debt to him, neither should her fame and our debt to her. For in truth they are inseparable. But there are people who say that monuments are vain things. So they are to vain people. But to those who have caught the sig niflcance of life monuments are the worthiest works of man. Hap py is the people who have them to build So far the race has pro ceeded by means of monuments they stand as bulwarks against all downwardtendencies whatso ever. . At the foot of that monument tu our Confederate soldiers the rising generations resolves to ac quit itself not less worthily than they. did. It is not then for t h e sake of the dead or the past that we rear these memorials. It is for the sake of ourselves and those who shall come after us to t h e last generation. A monument to the Women of the Confederacy ! will spea k a message to the pres- J entand future daughters of the j South more lofty, more inspiring, more potent for all that is good than any other thing whatsoev er. It will go further towardpre serving the ideals of that great generation, further toward re newing our civilization uall that best in the Old South, further to ward saving the women of amore prosperous period from the temp tations of luxury, further toward bringing forth here a race which shall be earth's chief glory, than any other thing that 1 know of. And to fail to build this monu ment will be to convict ourselves of blindness to this immensely significant, and sublime fact. '; But we should not forget our duty to these women. If a monu ment had no use save that of dis charging in its poor measure the debt of a people to their heroic ouls, we should build this monu ment to the Women of the Con federacy. In no other way may we repay them. In no other way may we recognize our debt and render our tribute to them. Our gratitude for illustrious perfor manccs and imperishable services should so oppress our hearts for utterance that we must ne.ds a rise and express it as fitly as we may. We. build monuments not for the future, but in order, to express that sense of gratitude and reverence which we can find no other means to so worthily express. To fail to build this monument to the Women of the Confederacy would be to convict ourselves of indifference to the most heroic suffering that a generation ,of women ever endured; to convict ourselves of want of blindness to the value of the most inspiring examples that were ever given to a people; to convict ourselves of want of gratitude and .reverence for the noblest service ever render ed. And since it cannot be said that Southern men are wanting in these great elements of man hood, I am assured that they will no longer postpone the dis charge of this most obvious hon orableduty. We must not postpone it. These forty years have, carried away the large .majority of the Men and Women of the Confederacy; and in a short time the remnant will follow after. Before they go the generation that succeeds them should rrive them this token of the honor in which they shall be forever held, this assurance that their sons and daughters, for whose inheritance they so heroi callv suffered, are worthy o f them. I know it is not well to go into details at this point, for to do so may produce ..controversy: and at present it is best for us all to hold to that in which we are a greed. But surely I risk nothing by suggesting that this rnonu ment should be of the noblest type. -We should not be content ; with a shaft and bronze figures. The noblest theme requires the most exalted treatment. Rich must be the rendering of a tribute so richly deserved. I would like to see a costly monument of one or several groups symbolic of the Women of the Confederacy, in granite and marble, so noble in conception and execution that the fame of it would run through out the world. And 1 would like to see it reared by the whole State. It is an undertaking that requires North Carolina her best. In such a work we should not plead economy. Bnt if one should there is an answer: North Caro lina is able. She has built a mon ument to the Confederate Sol diers, thanks to these women; she has provided a lloine and pensions for the needy veterans, she has provided the four months school; she has provided for her educational and charitable insti- utions. All is bright ahead of North Carolina. The days of her poverty are passed. It would ha ve been beautiful if in those days she had provided a modest memorial to her noblest daugh ters; but it is better that she has waited until the present t i m e(blocKaders captured were carried when she enn .afford to rear a to Mt. Airy, where yesterday monument that in all its features 'morning they were given a por will speak worthy of a great peo-jliminary hearing before a United iuVh nrmiwiation of their most illustrious and most precious 11 heritage. The Southern Man. Charlotte Chronicle. "The Southern man for Presi dent," is having another round. Colonel Bryan having intimated that if he is not to get nominated he might favor a southern man. In a discussion of the matter, The Washington Tost seems to think that sect ionalism is yet too rankly in the way. "For nearly half a century," says the Post, "citizenship of a Southern State hus rendered an American states man practically ineligible to the office of President of the United States or Vice President as much so as if the man were foreign born of alien parents. Thus the equality of citizenship is denied. Though he had "Caesar's and Plato's brain,", though he were Burke and Jefferson and Lincoln in one the mere fact that he is of Southern birth and of South ern residence would bar him from preferment in the national con vention of either party. . If Mr. Bryan were an ill mannered man we might interpret his discussion of a Southern candidate as some thing with a trace of a sneer." The Post deplores the reign of sectionalism and says: "It's time for the thing to stop; but it will not stop: The Democratic party is not a cell-governing society. It will do what ic is ordered to do, T!ie South tfill enter the conveu ti'n of 1903 nnd vote for a pre determined t'kt. There wns a time when the Democratic party cot its inspiration from the South. Jackson, Polk, Pierce and Buchanan were all nominated up on the dictation of the South To the list we may add Van Bij- ren, whovH nominattd nt the dictation of a Southern man. It ih hub the truth of history that heretofore the South has done what it has been ordered to doin tl)6 national convention, but there ha ye been some indica tions in recent months that this condition of things is not to last for all time. True, it it follows out the orders lor Bryan's nom ination it vill be but a repetition of previous (jerformances, and will delay the day of independ ence nnd an assertion ofswlf- righta hut will delay it for lour years only, for one mote expoii nc s will he enough. One of thene days the South will bn forced to assert its political courage. Remarkable Rescue, That truth is stranger than fiction has once more been demonstrated in the little town of Fedora, Tenn., the residence of C. V . Pepper. lie wi ites "1 was in bed, entirely disabled with hemorrhages of the lungs and throat Doctors failed to help me, and nil hope had fled when I began taking Dr. King's New Discovery. Then instant relief came. The couching soon ceased; the bleeding diminish ed rapidly, and in three weeks I was able to eo to work," Guaranteed for coughs nnd colds, 30c. and at all Druggists. Trial Bottle free OABTOIIIA. Ban tlx 1M KinO Id H3tl !W3 of WufeV j-CUcuM. The Bur Reienre Rpid in MoKes. Winston-Salem Dispatch, 20th. According to the report receiv ed here this afternoon from Mb. Airy, one or two of the block -aders near Smithtown, Stokes county, the settlement raided Wednesday by revenue officers, were shot in the battle between the officers and blocknders. It is learned that one of them w a s shot through the ear. The ten States commissioner, iney were held to appear at the next term of Federal Court at Greensboro, their bonds being fixed nt $1,000 each, .in default of which they went to jail at Dobson. They will remain in jail there until court meets unless in the meantiue bail is arranged. Tliraid was the largest and he most successful ever made in North Carolina. The squad of government men was directed by Deputy Collector J. p. S. Nor man, of this city. He h'ad 20 as sistants, the deputy marshal of this city being one of the number. As was stated in this correspon dence yesterday mominff, 13 il licit distilleries were captured by the raiders. A man this after noon from that section stated the revenue officers fell short by I at least 2" distilling plants of j breaking up illegal whisky mak ing in t h e t Smithtown settle ment, The first thing the officers did upon entering the ismitntown settlement was to a rrest a num. ber of women and children, this jeing done to prevent the spread of the news of their presence in the community. Thirteen stills were located m a radius oftwo miles. Asjthe band of officers entered the thickets in which they were located, about 00 shots were fired. About 300 gallons of whisky and 2-),000 gallons of beer were emptied. The MugicNo. 3. v Number three is a wonderful man cot tor (jco. II, i'arris, ot Lcuur Grove, Met. according to a letter which reads: "After sneering much wi'h liver and kidnev trouble and v becoming greatly discouraged by the failure to fiud relief, 1 tried Klectric Bitters, and as a result am a wen man to-uav. lne nisi 1 1 m tt hottdl relieved and tliree bottles com pleted the cure " Gunrenteed best emedy fsr stomach, liver and kid ney troubles, For sale by all drug. gist. 50c. When in Italy a card was brought to Mine Petti from a man whose name hh? did no know. When the stranger came n he proved to bo a little old man who was red and speechli-ss with nervousness. Suddenly Put ti noticed smoke coming out 0 his coat. Without saying a word she seized a glass of wfiter and threw it over him. The old man had put his lighted cigar into. his pocket whf n he entered the room nnd so had set fire to his coat Sir." said Mme Tatti. have had many admirers who profess ed themselves burning with ad miration for me, but I have nev er had betoie me one w ho went so far as to set himself ou fire to prove it." Ex . "I have h'.'ed the walking-stick I've carried over 40 years on account of a sore that resisted every kind of treatment tioUltl. tried Bucklen Arnica Salve: that has healed the sore nnd made me a happy man writes John Garrett, of North Mill N. C. Guaranteed for Piles, Uui ns, etc., by all druggists, 35c. Give the inchwonn time.and it will gain a foot hold. A Hair ressma If you wish a high-class hair dressing, we are sure Ayer's Hair Vigor, new Improved for mula, will greatly please youl It keeps the hair soft and smooth, makes it look rich and luxuriant, prevents splitting at the ends. And It keeps the. scalp free from dandruff. Diiia net thanve. I A eetcr of the hair. , 1'oro.ul wlili Moh bottlf e flliow It to your " ilnAtnp Aak him brat It, than iDMhiuji At t same time the new Ayer's Hair Vfgor is a strong hair tonic, promoting the p.rowth of the bair, keeping all the tissues of the hair and scalp in a healthy condition. The hair stops filling, dan druff disappears. A splendid dressing. Ml bjr Ui J. O. Ayr Oo., Unroll. The man who says he married the wrong woman speaks for the one who stood by her side in the years that are gone. Did he not marry the wrong woman? -.The truth is it's an unspeakable trag edy, beside which all other trage die are comedies that mock and . Jeer. !el. The Cause of Many Sudden Deaths. There is ft disease prevailing in thii country most dangerous because so decc'p. ' uve. JUnnysuuden deaths orf'Taiissd by it heart dis ease, pneumonia, heart failure or ajxjplexy are often the result of kid ney disease. If kidney trouble ia allowed toadvanc( the kidney-poisoned liload will t- tack the vital organs, causing catarrh of the bladder, or the kidneys ihcniselvea break down and waste away cell by cell. liladdcr troubles almost alwaya result from a derangement of the kidneys and a cure is obtained quickest by a proper treatment of the kidneys. If you are feel ing badly you can make no mistake by taking Dr. Kilmer's .Swamp-Root, tht grout kidney, liver nnd bladder remedy. It corrects inability to hold urine and sculdinir pain in passing it, and over comes mat unpleasant necessity 01 ueing . compelled to go often through the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest lor us wonucrtni cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and ti sold by all druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles. You may have a sample bottle of this wonderfnl new dis covery and a book that tells all about it, both sent free by mail. Address, Dr. Kil mer & Co., IHnghatiiton, N. V. When writing mention reading this generoua offer in this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the naine,fawanip Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swauip-Koot, and tnp address, Binghanitou, N. Y., on every bottle. The best way to imagine hqjr hard it is to go to heaven is hov easy it is to get out of debt. It is mighty hard to be really good when the lights are bright and everybody is laughing, your fluids with V Inriuln-Cmoltna Foti it vnn wunt tn no dollars tott. feed tUlAOrl. IDVJ wui muroov juur triiiuu ni uire.'BDd thut hrlrir (Iwrtti mnnl&la from fnrmort who bve trior'! WM hftVrt tl.nt1UU1 or other makua 01 ii tuizevn ana wun thut Virsrtaia-Carcliaa FertUIztra rj3 are ry fir tiro ncjt. -iT.nj win fivQ-rj r you. Bu7 no ntuiovm ir aircj tn.l.Y-nrsl to rut WU to bur yrc lytmikoa little m.iro r"f. Cn Of oonrno, that nouidbo ihllwl;t i,hut " l.mrii in t l-ieeeuM hp r '1 ----- l.uujftMr.krinuuria u,ii..t.ii. w.. KWtWJ, 1. rVTCi, Til. initcirrc, i s ,m . - v j Ill u Aijers War